A Real-time Registry to Track Breast Cancer Patients...

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A Real-time Registry to Track Breast Cancer Patients Across Boston

REDCapCon, September 22, 2020

Amy LeClair, PhD, Tufts Medical Center, Boston, MA

Clara Chen, MHS, Boston University, Boston, MA

Funding & Disclosures

Views expressed are our own, do not represent NIH/NCATS.

No financial interests to declare.

1U01TR002070-01

Tracy Battaglia, MD MPHBoston Medical Center

Stephenie Lemon, PhDUMass Medical Center

Jennifer Haas, MDMass General Hospital

Karen M. Freund, MD MPHTufts Medical Center

Principal Investigators

Translating Research Into Practice (TRIP)

Goal: address racial and socioeconomic disparities in receipt of timely breast cancer treatment

Intervention: Standardized patient navigation protocol across 6 academic medical centers

Problem: How to Create a Real-time Registry?

Track patients in real-time

Identify patients most vulnerable for delays

Allow navigators to see which patients need attention

Facilitate Inter-System Communication

Monitor Navigators’ Activities

Patient Navigation Workflow Across 6 Sites

Solution:

Benefits

HIPAA compliant

Free for researchers -embedded within CTSA hubs

Facilitates dissemination

Challenges

Designed for data capture, not clinical use

Minimize entering same content in multiple software platforms

User resistance

Challenges for the Registry

• Streamline data entry for Patient Navigators

•Visual tracking at-a-glance

• Facilitate communication between sites

Clinical Challenge #1 - Streamlining data entry

• Six sites, each with own existing methods of tracking

• Electronic medical record, MSExcel, Outlook, sticky

notes

• Patient Navigators’ biggest challenge is a lack of time

• Reduce the burden of entering the same information

into multiple software platforms

Technical Solutions – Streamlining data entry

• Multiple projects combined using dynamic SQL joins

• Site-specific dropdowns and piped fields

• Use of embedded links and referring URL to reduce keying

on external partners’ websites

Using Dynamic SQL Joins

Site-specific Patient Navigator information is piped into dropdown menus and reports

Using Referring URLs

https://tripteam.auntbertha.com/external/search?api_key=XXXXXXXXXXX&subject_id=1001

This TRIP Registry ID is automatically inserted into the external partner’s website when it is opened.

Within the participant-specific data entry page in REDCap, there’s a descriptive field with a clickable URL that incorporates TRIP Registry ID into the constructed URL:

Clinical Challenge #2 –Visual Tracking At-a-Glance

Technical Solutions –Visual Tracking At-a-Glance

• Technical solutions

•More customized dashboards and reports

• Encouraged use of search function within REDCap

Visual Tracking At-a-Glance: Patient Tracking Report

Clinical Challenge #3 – Facilitate Communication Across Sites

• No easy way to document communications between hospitals

• Each site had their own electronic medical record (EMR) and notes

Technical Solutions –Facilitate Communication Across Sites

• Technical solutions

• Data entry forms providing more

detail around transitions between

navigators and between sites

• REDCap Messenger

User Feedback – What works

The messenger service is definitely, in terms of what is useful for me, the number one thing that's helpful is being able to have every navigator involved on the same kind of messaging database. So, instead of exchanging emails or even phone numbers, it's all just right there and I know that if I'm sending a message that they're getting an email notification that that is happening.

User Feedback – What works

Generally, if there was a patient who was lost to follow up, and if I had known let's say they were going to [TRIP Site], I may be able to call over to their oncology department and introduce myself and try to see if that patient was being taken care of. But the REDCap service allowed me a shortcut in a way that I am able to directly reach out to somebody who I know is back there and just immediately give them …the name and date of birth, and then see if that patient is being followed.

User Feedback – Ongoing Challenges

And I still find that it [REDCap] is a little bit cumbersome to work with and maybe because I'm not working with it every day that it feels that way to me. But every time I go into to find things, I'm always, "All right, now where is that again?" And even though I take out my [training manual], and I do try to look and, but, and maybe it's just me and others don't really have that trouble with it.

We document in our medical record and then REDCap just becomes another site to document. So again, it just feels like an additional task to take on top of other things I'm already doing, which can be a time consuming.

AcknowledgementsTRIP Registry TeamTracy Battaglia, Boston Medical CenterChristopher Shanahan, Boston Medical CenterSharon Bak, Boston Medical CenterBill Adams, Boston Medical CenterVictoria Xiao, Boston Medical CenterKatelyn Mullikin, Boston Medical CenterCarolyn Finney, Boston UniversityChris Lloyd-Travaglini, Boston University

Marisa Massaro, Boston UniversityKaren Freund, Tufts Medical Center Stephenie Lemon, UMass Medical CenterJennifer Haas, Mass General HospitalCaylin Marotta, Mass General Hospital

REDCap TeamMark McEver, Vanderbilt University

For more information

http://sites.bu.edu/coeinwomenshealth/research/trip-redcap-registry/